• In Norse myth she (Skaði) is a daughter of frost giants who feuds with Loki and whence married Njord.
  • Skaði would fain dwell in the abode which her father had had, which is on certain mountains, in the place called Þrymheimr; but Njǫrðr would be near the sea.
  • Skaði, eagle-eyed huntress of white-capped peaks, peerless in strength, she who delights in blizzards bleak...
  • In Heimskringla, Skaði is described as having split up with Njörðr and as later having married the god Odin, and that the two produced many children together.
  • Skaði: Wilderness Woman. Originally published in Sagewoman , Summer, 2002. ... Skaði: Wilderness Woman. Freyja: Lady of Love and Life.
  • On Jammið, the message is strong, and Skaði plays all the instruments by herself.
  • In Heimskringla, Skaði is described as having split up with Njörðr and as later having married the god Odin, and that the two produced many children together.
  • Njörðr, Skaði, and Freyr as depicted in The Lovesickness of Frey (1908) by W. G. Collingwood.
  • The incessant sound of the ocean and screaching of sea birds was too much for Skaði, who was used to the soft silence of the snow and the howling of her wolves.